Readers of this blogsite know that I feel there are four key issues -- I call them "stars" -- that must be in alignment for the real estate market to reverse its downward trend.
These four stars are the
price of real estate itself,
property taxes,
property insurance and the
availability of mortgage funds. My feeling is that whenever any of these four stars are out of alignment, the whole real-estate-thing comes to a halt.
Just look at how the stars were aligned for the real estate boom of the first half of this decade. Prices were much, much lower than they are today. Taxes were affordable. Insurance was not an issue. And mortgage companies featured something called "creative financing" which basically meant anybody who could sign their name to loan docs could qualify for a mortgage.
Today, prices are high. Florida's property tax policy is broken, and the repair is questionable. Insurance companies ignore the new laws enacted by the legislature just a few months ago. And now, it appears that the mortgage star is moving farther and farther from the centerline.
The situation with sub-prime mortgages has apparently gone from bad to worse as projections of doom fill the financial pages. The financial industry is now discovering that making loans to people who really can't repary them is wrong. Adjustable rate mortgages (ARM) appear to be the main culprit. ARMs offered an ultra-attractive initial interest rate at the start, then kicked in with higher interest rates after two years.
Let's see, two years would be ... ummmmm ... now! And the biggest month for re-setting those new rates is going to be in October. So, bad as things appear to be today, they are likely going to get a lot worse come autumn.
How much worse? Here are the financial facts ...
About $50-billon in mortgages will switch to a new rate in October for the first time. From that point on, about $30-billion in mortgages will click upward every month through September, 2008. All in all, $1-trillion in mortgages will reset for the first time -- that's 12% of America's total mortgage amount.
Here's what that means ...
A total of 3.2-million houses were pruchased in the ten years ending 2005 using sub-prime mortgages. Now, two years later, the estimate is that 1.7-million buyers will lose their homes as these mortgages click over to new, higher rates. In other words, over half the homeownership gains of the last 10 years brought about by sub-prime lending stand to be lost.
If you're a seller, this has dire consequences. Those foreclosed houses will flood the market and further depress real estate prices.
It's going to become tough on buyers too! The reason? Mortgage companies are going to become ultra conservative in their lending policies and make it much harder for people to get mortgage loans, even people with strong credit ratings. So, its going to become harder to buy a house. Buyers are going to have to prove creditworthiness -- something many just can't do.
You see? The fourth star is moving farther out of alignment!
Home sales depend on availability of mortgage money. A credit crunch will make the housing market even worse, forcing lower prices, reducing the number of qualified buyers and prolonging time on market for those who want or need to sell property. You will likely see higher interest rates as mortgage-bond investors pull the plug on risky mortgages and "creative financing" falls under more and more business and government bureaucratic rule-making and red tape.
Even loans for people dubbed "Alt-A" -- a loan category between prime and sub-prime for borrowers who can not fully document their incomes or assets or those who wish to purchase income properties -- will start to dry up in the coming months. Alt-A loans accounted for about 13 percent of mortgages last year, and subprime loans accounted for another 20 percent. Industry experts are now saying that they expect Alt-A and subprime loans to be reduced by 50 percent during the next year.
In the short term, this will mean more problems for the real estate industry, and the fall-out will surely affect us in the Tampa Bay area which had rampant real estate speculation and more than its share of sub-prime mortgage loans. In the long term, however, it will help usher in a return to normal lending policies that will anchor better times in the real estate market. When will those better times return? Sorry, my crystal ball is a bit cloudy on the date.
If you think I'm mistaken about this, take a look at what has been happening on Wall Street during the past week when all this frightening news came out about mortgages. The Dow has lost a fortune, mostly over investor uneasiness about the mortgage and real estate business. Wall Street experts expect that the economy as a whole can absorb these mortgage problems, but you never know and even the big boys are uneasy. So, they're hedging by selling. Those big boys wouldn't be worried if this wasn't a real problem headed our way, and soon.
The fourth star is moving farther off center. My opinion? Folks, this so-called market correction ain't over yet.
For more information on real estate in the Tampa Bay area, please visit my website at
http://www.thestpeterealestatesite.com/.
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